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The 1980 horror cult-classic Cannibal Holocaust was censored for years after its release. Luckily, the uncut version is available now with all of the gore and violence intact (you'll need to stuff your eyes with toilet paper to make it through some of it though). The movie is made by Italian filmmaker Ruggero Deodato who also directed The House on the Edge of the Park, just in case you're looking for more. Check out our review below or head over to Amazon for this awesome addition to any horror collection! Cannibal Holocaust Uncut 1980 Dvdrip is truly one of the most disturbing films ever made. It is a cannibal film, but not of the kind you might be expecting. It is actually more of a realistic portrayal of how primitive man would have eaten. There are scenes in this movie that are too graphic to describe without disturbing your stomach. If you are looking for something with cheap make-up effects and people pretending to eat each other, then this movie is not for you. As an anthropologist, I appreciated the way this movie was made more than any other cannibal film I have seen in the past. The director did some research about how different peoples have eaten throughout human history and made sure not to leave anything out. The amount of detail in this movie is amazing. I have to give Claude Chabrol credit for his realistic approach to portraying the violence. The first half of the film is so realistic that I felt as if I was actually watching a documentary or a story being told by someone who had seen it happen to someone else. [[CD1]] [[CD2]] [[CD3]] Here are some German reviews that are simply hilarious: ---"It's one of those movies that, even after you've left your cinema seat, makes you want to stay home and watch it again. The audience is so enthusiastic and the film so fantastic that they don't want to leave at all. " "Uncut and pretty damn good!" "Cannibal Holocaust, the most disgusting movie I've ever seen." Uncut: http://www.widescreenreview.com/reviews/2001/cannibal_holocaust_full.html This review is based on a region-free dvd-ripped rip from SAVRAN CINEMAS, Portugal: http://www.dvdverdict. com/reviews/Reviews/review.cfm?id=3464 Here is the review by Roger Ebert: It's a little like watching a documentary of an old-time missionary society in darkest Africa, or of the American frontier. There's no dialogue; there's no music; there are no people; there are no sounds of modern civilization; and yet, somehow, we watch and understand what has happened because the images and the actions and the rhythms and details mean exactly what they mean. The movie is allegorical: it shows us something we would not normally imagine - how primitive man would have eaten - but we see it with such exactitude that we recognize it as real. cfa1e77820
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